Henry Newman (journalist)
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Henry Newman (journalist)
Henry Newman may refer to: * Henry Newman (cricketer) (1907–1988), Australian cricketer * Henry Newman (football coach) (born 1989), English association football coach * Henry Newman (Medal of Honor) (1845–1915), German-born soldier in the U.S. Army and Medal of Honor recipient * Henry Newman (political adviser), British political adviser * Harry Newman (politician) (1839–1904), French-born Australian politician * Henry Stanley Newman (1837–1912), grocer, Quaker philanthropist, and author See also * John Henry Newman (1801–1890), English cardinal * Harry Newman (1909–2000), American football player * Henry Neumann Henry Neumann Zayas is an attorney, and a former state senator for the District of San Juan (PNP-R) Former Secretary of Sports and Recreation of Puerto Rico. After finishing high school entered Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., where ...
(born 1950), Puerto Rican politician {{hndis, Newman, Henry ...
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Henry Newman (cricketer)
Henry Newman (13 March 1907 – 23 April 1988) was an Australian cricketer. He played three first-class matches for Western Australia Western Australia (commonly abbreviated as WA) is a state of Australia occupying the western percent of the land area of Australia excluding external territories. It is bounded by the Indian Ocean to the north and west, the Southern Ocean to th ... between 1927/28 and 1931/32. See also * List of Western Australia first-class cricketers References External links * 1907 births 1988 deaths Australian cricketers Western Australia cricketers Cricketers from Fremantle {{Australia-cricket-bio-1900s-stub ...
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Henry Newman (football Coach)
Henry John Newman (born 1989) is first-team assistant coach at West Ham United Career Newman joined Barnet in 2009 as assistant coach for the under-18s team while completing a degree in economics and philosophy at the London School of Economics. Newman achieved five "A" grades at A Level. Newman left Barnet in 2011 to become under-15s coach at Charlton Athletic. He later coached at Brentford before re-joining Barnet in 2014 to become the youngest academy manager in the country. He was appointed joint interim manager at Barnet on 1 December 2016, alongside Rossi Eames. Eames took sole charge for a win over Morecambe on 14 February 2017 and, the following day, Newman's departure from the club was announced. In August 2019, Newman, along with business partner Rory Campbell, made a bid to purchase Bury F.C. through their company C&N Sporting Risk shortly before the club's deadline to show proof of funds to the English Football League The English Football League (EFL) is a l ...
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Henry Newman (Medal Of Honor)
Henry Newman (c. 1845 – July 13, 1915) was a German-born soldier in the U.S. Army who served with the 5th U.S. Cavalry during the Indian Wars. In the Apache Wars, he was one of three men who received the Medal of Honor for gallantry against a hostile band of Apache Indians in the Whetstone Mountains of Arizona on July 13, 1872. Biography Henry Newman was born in the German Confederation in about 1845. He later emigrated to the United States and enlisted in the U.S. Army in Cincinnati, Ohio. Assigned to frontier duty with the 5th U.S. Cavalry, he took part in the Apache Wars during the early 1870s and eventually rose to the rank of first sergeant. On July 13, 1872, Newman set off from Camp Crittenden with a small cavalry detachment under the command of Second Lieutenant William P. Hall to pursue an Apache raiding party that had stolen cattle from a local Mexican rancher. They pursued the Apaches fifteen miles into a canyon in the Whetstone Mountains and encountered a much ...
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Henry Newman (political Adviser)
Henry Newman is a British political adviser. He is an adviser to Michael Gove, having formerly been a senior adviser to Prime Minister Boris Johnson. He also served as a councillor on Camden London Borough Council. Early life Newman's grandmothers were an Istanbul-born Greek, and a German Jew who fled the Nazis, before training as a doctor at the Royal Free Hospital. Newman was an undergraduate at Christ Church, Oxford. He later studied at Harvard University and the London School of Economics. Career Newman taught politics and history at various universities, including politics at SOAS University of London, before working in Whitehall under Prime Minister David Cameron during the Conservative–Liberal Democrat coalition. He worked on Government efficiency and prison reform and was promoted through various roles as a special adviser. Newman worked for Francis Maude at the Cabinet Office. He joined Michael Gove at the Ministry of Justice in 2015. Newman was a special adviser ...
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Harry Newman (politician)
Henry William Newman (27 November 1839 – 1 June 1904) was a French-born Australian politician. He was born at Nantes in France to Robert William Newman, the British Vice-Consul at Nantes, and Adelaide Heseltine. The family migrated to Sydney in 1841 and he attended Sydney Grammar School. He briefly studied law and went to the gold rush, failing at Forbes and having some success at Lucknow with the "Homeward Bound" claim, but lost all his money going into business in Lucknow. He spent four years as a mining labourer at Grenfell and a stint as a newspaper reporter at Forest Reefs (near Cadia), before returning to Lucknow and purchasing the main storekeeping business there. The second Lucknow business was very successful, and he subsequently went into mining ownership, purchasing his first mine, the "Uncle Tom", in 1878. His interests at Lucknow were partially attributed with the revival of the town, and he continued to acquire mining interests, with interests all over New So ...
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Henry Stanley Newman
Henry Stanley Newman (25 April 1837 – 23 October 1912) was a grocer, Religious Society of Friends, Quaker philanthropist, and author. He founded Leominster Orphan Homes, was active in the Religious Society of Friends, and edited ''The Friend (Quaker magazine), The Friend'' publication for 20 years. Early life Henry Stanley Newman was the first child and only son of Josiah Newman, grocer, and Harriett Wood, daughter of a Liverpool tea dealer. Born in Liverpool, he moved to Deptford and then New Cross in London, as his parents' business failed, and then to Cirencester in 1842, where they began to prosper. Newman attended Bootham School, York 1848-1852 where he became friends with boys from other notable Quaker families. Harriett died in 1851 shortly after giving birth to her fourth daughter. Josiah moved the family to Leominster in 1852 to take over the running of his father's grocery business, Newman and Son, in the same year that Newman was apprenticed to the Quaker firm of I ...
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John Henry Newman
John Henry Newman (21 February 1801 – 11 August 1890) was an English theologian, academic, intellectual, philosopher, polymath, historian, writer, scholar and poet, first as an Anglican ministry, Anglican priest and later as a Catholic priest and Cardinal (Catholic Church), cardinal, who was an important and controversial figure in the religious history of England in the 19th century. He was known nationally by the mid-1830s, and Canonisation of John Henry Newman, was canonised as a saint in the Catholic Church in 2019. Originally an Evangelical Anglicanism, evangelical academic at the University of Oxford and priest in the Church of England, Newman became drawn to the high-church tradition of Anglicanism. He became one of the more notable leaders of the Oxford Movement, an influential and controversial grouping of Anglicans who wished to return to the Church of England many Catholicity, Catholic beliefs and liturgical rituals from before the English Reformation. In th ...
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Harry Newman
Harry Lawrence Newman (September 5, 1909 – May 2, 2000) was an All-Pro American football quarterback. He played for the University of Michigan Wolverines (1930–32), for whom in 1932 he was a unanimous first-team All-American, and the recipient of the Douglas Fairbanks Trophy as Outstanding College Player of the Year (predecessor of the Heisman Trophy), and the Helms Athletic Foundation Player of the Year Award, he was later inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. He then played professionally for the New York Giants (1933–35), and the Brooklyn/Rochester Tigers (1936–37). Early life Newman was born in Detroit, Michigan, and was Jewish. He was a running back at Northern High School, where he also played center field on the baseball team, and then attended a camp where Benny Friedman was the counselor and taught him how to pass a football. College career Newman attended the University of Michigan, and played for the Wolverines in football in 1930–32. In N ...
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